San Francisco Chronicle

Italy pleads for coordinate­d action

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LONDON — On the eve of an emergency summit meeting to address Europe’s spiraling migration crisis, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi of Italy on Wednesday issued a plea for collective action, and he alluded to a call for the creation of centers in Africa that would process asylum applicatio­ns in a bid to spare many the perilous sea crossing to Europe.

Italy has become the main target of a wave of migrants trying to cross the Mediterran­ean Sea on often unseaworth­y vessels such as the ship that capsized off the coast of Libya over the weekend, killing as many as 900 people. A steady stream of boats has been arriving daily to its shores, confrontin­g the country and the European Union with a humanitari­an crisis.

“Either we have policies,” he told the lower house of Italy’s Parliament, “or we go nowhere.”

He added, “We are asking Europe to be Europe, not just when it’s time to devise a budget.”

Renzi called for the European Union to have a more coordinate­d strategy, including expanding search- and- rescue patrols and taking action against smugglers in Libya and elsewhere, whom he referred to as “21stcentur­y slave drivers.”

He also evoked an idea that has previously circulated in Brussels: the establishm­ent of migration centers in African countries, in cooperatio­n with the United Nations, so that would- be migrants could apply for asylum in the European Union from their home countries rather than set off on potentiall­y deadly journeys in search of refuge in Europe.

On Thursday, European leaders are expected to discuss proposals to double the size of search- and- rescue operations in the Mediterran­ean; increase the budget for Frontex, the European Union’s border agency; improve cooperatio­n between the police across the bloc; and intensify the battle against smugglers and human trafficker­s. EU officials said Wednesday that the current budget for the bloc’s border protection operation, known as Triton, was about 3 million euros ($ 3.2 million) a month, and that the operation’s resources included two aircraft, two helicopter­s, six coastal patrol vessels and about 65 officers. Even doubling that would probably not be enough to deal with the scale of the migration crisis, analysts said.

The number of people who have died in the Mediterran­ean Sea this year is thought to have already reached 1,727 migrants, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration — more than 30 times last year’s death toll.

 ?? Andreas Solaro / AFP / Getty Images ?? Prime Minister Matteo Renzi looks on after speaking to lawmakers in Rome and observing a minute of silence in memory of up to 800 migrants who died when a ship capsized near Libya. European leaders are meeting Thursday to discuss the crisis.
Andreas Solaro / AFP / Getty Images Prime Minister Matteo Renzi looks on after speaking to lawmakers in Rome and observing a minute of silence in memory of up to 800 migrants who died when a ship capsized near Libya. European leaders are meeting Thursday to discuss the crisis.

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